"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Here is the easiest solution.Ssd for the os drive and store data on raid 1 platter drives.
We have each machine with SSD drives where OS/Programs live. Each machine has a data drive which is just a normal internal drive (large). We like this as some files are super big and opening over the network has a slight hesitation on big ones. Our server which is running raid then copies each machine at night. So we have 2 copies at least of each machine. In addition each machine as a external copying the data drive at night. Somewhat over kill but I have never lost anything doing it this way.
I've had multiple multi thousand dollar RAID setups (with hardware controllers) fail and cause significant issues. Since then I keep it simple. Server has a mirror with set up directly from the factory (IBM/Lenovo) to reduce the potential of hardware incompatibility. It is using regular hard drives as they are faster than what the network will support. Systems are backed up to the server and the server itself has an internal drive to back up everything and external drives to back that up (one is in a fireproof/waterproof safe).Here's something to think about, most airplane manufacturers have gone from 4 engines back to two. They found that introducing more engines caused more frequent problems without really delivering more reliability. So they switched back to two engines per plane . . .Also, spending half a day to restore from backup is not the end of the world. It should not be happening at all, but taking a little longer once in 10 years probably has a better ROI than a complicated backup solution.pierre
Makes sense. How would you be in case of fire/theft though? Those are the two that get me, we've got a drive literally in the wallfor theft, but fire would kill us there. As is I take home a drive every week with out two most important files (quickbooks and our database).
Quote from: Gilligan on November 17, 2015, 08:18:30 PMHere is the easiest solution.Ssd for the os drive and store data on raid 1 platter drives.I forgot to mention that's how we have our machines setup already. I would actually ratherraid the OS drive because that would be the majority of our time recovering from a failure,reinstalling all of our programs etc. Storage is just that, a fairly long copy time and we'dbe done.Quote from: GraphicDisorder on November 18, 2015, 09:23:20 AMWe have each machine with SSD drives where OS/Programs live. Each machine has a data drive which is just a normal internal drive (large). We like this as some files are super big and opening over the network has a slight hesitation on big ones. Our server which is running raid then copies each machine at night. So we have 2 copies at least of each machine. In addition each machine as a external copying the data drive at night. Somewhat over kill but I have never lost anything doing it this way. Makes sense. How would you be in case of fire/theft though? Those are the two that get me, we've got a drive literally in the wallfor theft, but fire would kill us there. As is I take home a drive every week with out two most important files (quickbooks and our database).Quote from: blue moon on November 18, 2015, 11:42:30 AMI've had multiple multi thousand dollar RAID setups (with hardware controllers) fail and cause significant issues. Since then I keep it simple. Server has a mirror with set up directly from the factory (IBM/Lenovo) to reduce the potential of hardware incompatibility. It is using regular hard drives as they are faster than what the network will support. Systems are backed up to the server and the server itself has an internal drive to back up everything and external drives to back that up (one is in a fireproof/waterproof safe).Here's something to think about, most airplane manufacturers have gone from 4 engines back to two. They found that introducing more engines caused more frequent problems without really delivering more reliability. So they switched back to two engines per plane . . .Also, spending half a day to restore from backup is not the end of the world. It should not be happening at all, but taking a little longer once in 10 years probably has a better ROI than a complicated backup solution.pierre I knew you had mentioned a harddrive in a safe, and when I asked the droids at Fry's (a brick and mortar Newegg for those not familiar) theylaughed at me "you can't run cables into a safe and have it be fireproof, no such thing". I'll look again.I think you're right Pierre about the complicated backup solution, the more I try and plan for every possible scenariojust adds layers and layers of potential problems. KISS.Thanks for your input everyone, more to chew on. Any one have any thoughts on backing up open/shared files such as Quickbooks etc?Another computer myth?
http://www.amazon.com/SentrySafe-SFW123GTF-Electronic-Connection-Cubic/dp/B00LU1UQG6pierre
I forgot to mention that's how we have our machines setup already. I would actually ratherraid the OS drive because that would be the majority of our time recovering from a failure,reinstalling all of our programs etc. Storage is just that, a fairly long copy time and we'dbe done.